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Home / Lifestyle

Does a bad night's sleep make you fat? - Expert explains

By Charlotte Hardman
Other·
8 Jan, 2014 12:30 AM4 mins to read

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Not getting enough sleep could be putting you at risk of obesity. Photo / Thinkstock

Not getting enough sleep could be putting you at risk of obesity. Photo / Thinkstock

Few people would argue with the idea that sleep is good for us, but not many of us know that a lack of sleep can cause weight gain.

The health benefits of sleep are extremely well-documented. It provides protection from many medical and psychiatric conditions as well as having positive effects on mood, quality of life and wellbeing.

But more recently, mounting evidence has suggested that poor sleep is associated with an increased risk of obesity.

Short sleep duration appears to predict changes in weight over time. Children who were poor sleepers at three years of age, for instance, have been found more likely to be obese by the age of seven.

Sleep and brain function

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While there are a number of possible explanations for the relationship between poor sleep and obesity, there's growing support for the idea that disrupted sleep increases food intake. This may be due to the effect of sleep deprivation on brain function and the physiological control of appetite.

Some studies, for instance, indicate that short sleep duration increases levels of the gut hormone, ghrelin, which makes us feel hungry and often leads to increased eating.

Poor sleep might also increase the reward value of eating by making certain foods seem more attractive and increasing our motivation to obtain them. This idea is supported by recent research using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which measures activity in specific regions of the brain by detecting changes in blood flow.

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The study found that, in people with limited sleep, the brain regions associated with reward "lit up" more in response to pictures of tasty food, suggesting that sleepy people found these foods more appealing.

At the same time, lack of sleep might also impair our ability to make decisions and exert self-control over food intake.

In another recent brain imaging study, 23 healthy people had a night of normal sleep and a night of total sleep deprivation followed by fMRI scans.

After sleep deprivation, there was greater activity in the amygdala region of the brain (which is important for reward behaviour) in response to pictures of food. Sleep-deprived participants also reported a greater desire specifically for high-calorie foods compared to low-calorie foods.

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At the same time, the scans showed other regions of the brain believed to be important for "higher-level" brain function and self-control were less active after sleep deprivation. This means sleepy people may be less able to control what and how much they eat.

When you're sleepy you may be drawn to eating high calorie food, and too much of it.
Photo / Thinkstock
When you're sleepy you may be drawn to eating high calorie food, and too much of it. Photo / Thinkstock

So it seems sleep deprivation may promote over-eating via a two-pronged effect on brain function - the desirability of food is increased at the same time as higher-level processes that enable us to control how much we eat fail.

Understanding self-control

The idea that sleep deprivation reduces our ability to inhibit certain behaviours also appears to make sense in the context of more general theories of self-control.

The Limited Resource theory, for instance, proposes that we have a finite reserve of self-control that can be used to regulate our behaviour, similar to a muscle that becomes fatigued under too much pressure.

When you are tired after poor sleep, you might have reduced self-control "strength", making you more likely to engage in disinhibited behaviours, such as over-eating unhealthy foods.

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Indeed, a longitudinal study found over-tiredness in childhood predicted lower inhibitory control in adolescence which, in turn, predicted illicit drug use.

The next step for this line of research is to illustrate whether these findings apply to excessive consumption of food.

There is, in fact, growing evidence that poor inhibitory control is a critical factor in over-eating, along with other substance use disorders.

But it's important to consider alternative mechanisms that might account for the association between sleep, eating and obesity such as the dampening effect poor sleep has on mood. After bad sleep, we may feel fed up or depressed, which might promote the eating of high-calorie "comfort foods".

Research in this area provides important insight into the causes of over-eating, obesity and potential intervention strategies. Helping people to improve the length and quality of sleep may be one such approach.

Charlotte Hardman is a Lecturer in Appetite and Obesity at University of Liverpool. She receives funding from the Economic and Social Research Council and the Welsh Assembly government.

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